E! U II 1111111111111111011 W ___ 1 ' , Many tatelt. : Us Itteiipeliiireir' - '" . - . I- . 1, ' 2eitnreatil'AT' DTA . 7 1 11 .. n, ewer Longfellows ••peeeermeno • . . • ' . t„'beiatifolly told, of the-death of. • .., , who ease to Italy .'to study lesule Rage itßome, tied had taken the l • , st:sPoakin friar.. While dying, he know of •tuatissiLlsOtaratenotgiverim the hope of reach • own h h a pne i before his decease. "He spoke of ..,• to ' ;native land, witkehildish diOight.—• hope untdesened him. It seemed never to * entered his pled tharthisconsolation would be 4' ed • Itit,„,w- us. death would thwart -even these • enlist ' ' , •Lehall soon be well enough: • • Ins' , - . i ,',4liihall twedbe well! I shalt not die • - •• thegkiriesef this melting sky— *.'• ink isCh heektharbathe the-classic:it - land 1 _ ly—these gales that are so bland, • ' Wasy'aua an cool, Ilpoomy grave t I not, at eesper's chnoing, restadd wive. . • me not lam dying— for !Seel le pulses throb, new life-bleed elledY 'tea as gentle slumber presses these sad-eyes. • • • soon in evened' tkou wilt behold cat rise: 9 a fow dap wilt pass.'and I shall be t. nosy ho.....retunt‘dear friends. with thee; i • thereltteave each hoary Appenine. • tbe high Alps endear) ear/yen - the Rhine, England%svales, wherejoy and plenty smile. • greet thy , shoren. my own b-ight Emerald Isle? er. • en, moth sisters; your soft hands shall Wray my Bushed cheeks. and cool the heat away ; ' d whenthe death-teal stamps this marble brow. rk with soh truth 1 kept my holy vO,W. , ; 'OW to heaven. to live antouched by love, ; Ye that-amain* astintsforsaintsabove-- . • Q lovenor Saviour knew : Could He Ii ivs cried. i. r. in his unguikb, on his mother cried r ~ He ceased. and leaned his forehead to theair. _ y at came from flowery beds to tisit there • a Man's couch; the wrillietreshadisws fell deeper lapse- I breath/A.:ay hushed farewell— •, --t. gam, turned once more that face to view, ,1 a more-to-see that cheek's carnation hoe. Y, eyes were closed; a smile of beauty slept 1 his thin lips; I keelson' down and wept. hen silent. I arose; he h.id nut sums', • . ~ quiet lay. Anita an evening bird, : . dden among the leaves of some near tree, red sudden forth a flood of melody. know that strain." hecried--.1 know that strain-4 , g me tosilesp.,rwant sister. sing again r i.. :: . sank to sleepi—to al p—to dream that he I d crossed the illow of the far, wide seia r 1 it by hi ere ttage-door he-stood. I 1 dguseu on amiliar stream and wood. d ! %was all in dreams—few evenings passed, Y • the self-exiled stranger oreathed his last; • . 1 'nd that young heart was free as air to roast .. 'ot te its esutV.,biults heavenly home! : i i - Itiyirie NOMICNTS or 1107 TV. i 1 1 ' As I was dressing, on the morning oflHondati, t- seventeenth of September, Nicolson came iti, m t i , my roo and told me that his 'master had • r tlte in I, state of composure and consciousown l i „ d wished to see me immediately. I foondihiet tirely himself, though in the last degree o eness. • His eye was clear and calla—eve ace of the wild fire of delirium extinguished. hart." said he, "-I may have but a. mina e speak, to you. 51y, dear. be a good snail— irtuouv—berreligious—be a gpod man. No - g else, will give you say comfort when u Ina to,lie here." He paused, and I said, • ll •,send for Sophia and Anne?" . s•No," said e, ff e don't disturb them. - Poor soul!: I know th y ere op all night. God bless you all I" •W in is, he sank into a very tranquil sleep; andiind .. a s carcely a ft erward gave any sign of •;•scio . ere, except for ,an instant, on the arrival of it one. They, on learning that, the Liana was a. 'ot to close; obtained a new leave of abeeneelfr n eir ppsts , ant/ both reached Abbotsford on hi inateenth. About half past one, v. ie., on II weoty first September, Sir Walter breathed is [ et, 'alba presence of all his children. It w s a utifid day, so warm that every window as i tee open. and so perfectly still, that the se d, r all other. most delicious to his ear—the gentle ripple of the Tweed over its pebbles—was dis 'netly audibld, as we knelt around the bed • end his 'Meet son kissed and closed his eyes.—kock )rt"st Life of Scott. I SPOTNIXIX OP ILIPITIM. "They who, without knowing us, thirik it of os„ do us no wrong: it is pot ourselves whom tey !attack, but the phantom of their unagmation i If people wbuld only be influenced by This co sid oration, bow many eptbittared feelings woulQ be spared them. • voltam *SD scan , or Plowmen. It appears that white 'flowers more frequeCtly have an agreeable scent than coloured oneal for, in one'hundred white, there are, on ale averege, fourteen with - an agreeable and onlykine disagreeable; whereas, among the like number of coloured flowers, only six have as agreeable, I and ono a disagreeable odour. Chief Justice Marshall.—We h and fecently an anecdote of this distinguished man, which su strongly illustrates the. , tg- nitr and simplicity of his character, hat i, we venture to relate it, hoping it may., c , me into, the hands of his-future biograp ere, and ha woven into the thread of his iar rattve. It occurred em this city, en the occasion of one of the Chief - stice' pe riodical visits to hold the ederal urt fur this District. : A The old crier of the court having r -mo. ved iv died, tharshall, Gen. Daubs 1 , se. looted a new re6ttit, and gain him, Illonte days beforehand, the necessary proclOrna lions and formate) commit to mempry ,4 that he might be au fait when the wort The important day at length arrived,land the criei, with his "task well conned," made his appearance, attracting the o.len lion of all by the loftiness of his stride, and an air of conscious self importbnce which he made no effort to conceal. Eve. ry "'thing went off admirably at first. IThe. proclamation to jurors, witnesses, dr f c. svere roared out most sonorously, and the:time having arrived for charging the grand ury, the chief justice pulled out his ebell.thum bed paper, and waiting a few moments for the usual caution of silence to. be given by the crier; but observing .nO movement to that effect, commenced his charge. He had proceeded some way in it, When the crier, aroused from his reverie, found what was -going on, and considering the whole matter informal, with the quicikneys of thought stepped - into the bar, betereen the comas and jury, and addressing the judge in a mandatory voice, cried sir! Stop., sir!" 'The. chief jesiice, 'who seemed to see in a moment. licougli the whole tmnsaction c iottead or prdering the crier to prison for, a contempstopped,,as • commanded, and quietly awaited 'the re. suit. • A dead silence reigned ihroughont the court. The 411 of a pia mightfltava , I _ I= I, ....- ;- - heard. -- ' ' hate'atertateatallisilee*' -, —el & bdatiptilieeettit IliCasi,ot • - ' fdellie*l xelevilq`e o Oteeince*f_ ell he - heeiSeed. le'lleghthecrier , 6*w-og , itnself up to Flt. foil length,liwled, out--. , 0 yes! 0-yeil o . feid*All Mariner Uf pelt. utt are suguire4 to, 4thep -site., . -upon is erhaprea!ament, while the hmicouble Wile -is ipving his charge to the grand uryr - Wheels tiishedethisprodatuatiee , mined tot it court, with an air of lahency and wive of the bona, find said o the chief j tire, "you may go onisir." Evhry one ezrted to see the unfortunate riff sent- to ail; as a matter tif course, but without c eking a.-smile-, the chief e ustice Comm ed his charge de nave,-and I we6t through tut - though nothing bad hap pened. An . Hones 4 Heart at RoUows.-;-.About thirty years an, a merchant in a neighbor• ing city, (from whom we had the circum stance, though not at liberty to.steention_ names.) had thousand or two• of dollars stolen from h m.; His suspicion ffill upon ! one -of the c rk*: A writ was -got out against him , the young man confessed-the crime, but wtis doable to pay over' morel than a few' hnndited, dollars of the ' money. .11te inerchaht f earin g , if one so young, and One who , , Ifill this period sustained an unblemishhd reputation, should be im psoned for freers, to satisfy the demands ()tithe law, that Ibis hopes• in life would be Misted, oppo)-tunrty for information entire. ly cut off—that ~ in a word he would 'our: .ceder himself 0- despair—gave the liherty, and fold him to return the amonet. he had taken from him; it he was ever Mile to do sn. The young man went off, 1 a'd - the merchant heard no more of him ti last wintei•—then be received ofhitnar! 0 der for five hundred dollars, and a very handsome leiter rrequesting his correspon, dent to draW sant him for $5OO eta time, etiery yeartfill.ihe debt is cancelled! He is:a citizen ofhigh standing-in the West, and an officer of one of the banks in that section. Stich * man must have . had an honest heart at bottom, and in all Proba bility, if bl had been sent to. the State icison, Ate r °old have fallen a victim to dfispondency.—Claremont Eagic: ;• A Rogu4 Caught.—AnEnglishmarrre siding at Ctimbridge, some months since iad his • d4k • broken open, and about, 2000 in g Id stolen therefrom. Suspicion thug upot a sen-in law, who was employ -411 as under keeper at the House of'Cor• rection at test Cambridge, and it being (ibserved that a sort of intimacy existed between htrn and one of the convicts, a riotorioustyr bad d - elloss, they were both arefully !etched. About a week since the convict applied to Mr. Watson, the master of Ole house, for leave to transplant i tree from one part of the prison yard to itiotber aV better location, which was , 1 !granted. i (S ur p r ised, however. at the sin -6 ularity 01; . tbe kequest, Mr. Watson,deter , 1 ;_• rained unseen to w itness'the proceedings. When thOhnle htd been dug, and thetree in it, but I,befure the filling up lad com mcnced, te under- keeper came from oat: as the out butipings, and after examining fi the tree a tenttvely, and looking cautious . y about, slid something from between his legs into (he tole, and after throwing in a quantity f dirt, which he carefully trod ‘.4 idown, he I levied the convict to finish the filling up which be waited to superintend. After it as c•Frepleted, the master came forward, nd mending the convict to his cell, -relirked that he did ,not like the Ideation . f thi tree, and directed the on der-keepr to take the shovel and dig it up again. his be did very carefully, leaving a quannt of haulm earth in the hole, which he was a ' a 41 to shovel out —be (lid so, andtwith it also a little bag, which was .f”und to ontain a quantity of as fine gold sureneigris as jeadr was coined, and whic h . have sin g been sworn to as the stolen pro perty. 4llif cniirse it is unnecessary to add that the 4utifir/ son in litw is so longer the keeper, Opt the kept. • ; 1 Boston Evening Yournal: A Alia les Interior.- , -A man named Mil ler, a mul tie, has murdered near Ouncanels. land on turdey night last, under the following eircumsteeces, fu detailed by the Harrisburg Telegraph' I", "The cereimidances Of the ease, as fir as we have learnkd them, are, that Miller went into the bar-room4f tbeltavern and was there hiccuped by Sithamm of hhaving robbed his bar of some change, shout I dollar. This-Miller denied ind telt the b4use, but waft tattooed by ,Silbammer, who soonper returned and sent his ape for a physician ho had just before passed by .to the neet boil Ihen the physician came he was directed Sillisinmer to the spot where be fo'cind ni t orni Miller de . qe-had received a stab in hie left breast by_ aharp instrument , which peoetra. red alieut Hind* and most have produced m stant dui 4 jury ofinquest was held *fee the sport the examination of vvitneeiro , it was stat e by some of the female inniateo of the ta scream , house. thai tbei heard scream , and open look ing out sow M lier fall, and SilhamMer near him going tole ards ,he _house., , The verdict of the. ju ry, we underatetd. was. niii.Miller, came to his death by ki a . b given with some *harp instru- ment, au ;by Silhammer, whe kw haul 11. r• rested an lod4ed in tbugail sir Pon cooky -for triaL" '. . A smoky hie's, an unhand's, servant,* el. 121.. bling here% sloolding wife, an empty pores en undutiful; &H a, an aching tooth. an in at talker, 14s Ikkt break thtoogh , 1p enelosum. • dull razorr i . a pimpled 'Amm o and a fop, are Melee of *biter/Meat °film presenting. The "in Virginian wishes to knoa in What wa ths ' 'en liorldiken ban showslitetr hesulity . kg. Witseem* they have ea ed in getting . inititutinns ender link con trol they heett i t i Ltowa ilasit,osenity ilvesamig swag' oda tke evi .. to,/ stook....Lento• Jeersel., • •2, r. . . _ =MI .T 1 = • - POarte A L !let , 404 thi e bay-it is tiNe lawn could thpeet him ; imsalsk 4 ile f te would iv "schiefiritich eittailedispoia the. ; _ I bs Maliciona,outrageous iyitedt; in used 1 him to perpetuate his -poWer, and ten et. his, countrymen mis9able i abject :Mr. awes to his Seem Oen. iack-son's time; proieriptioa --Rtr opinioies' as ke wail unknown to our ipstitntimat. or xditical usages. , . .11 was one of the vOlgarautd un-, Manly suggestions to fintify powipr, that fouad its way to - the Palacel throagh the scullions of the Kitchen. We never heard of it until it was made in indispensable. l qualification in an applicant for office, that he believed as Gen.jacksonliselieired, arid supported ; Gen. Jackson, whither iright or wrong. , 1 ti . If , the Wbigi!have ever! followed the example of Geo. Jacksbn is tort:sing out those opposed inthem, it hyi beisti. render ed a matter of necessity bY theii obliga tion to purge official stations of the disho nes gang who recommendbd themselves. to .pubbc • patronage by togsin i g am their caps in the unadulterated . tipiritOf min worship. We repeat it, that -polkiical pro scription for opinion ' s sake, was due of the worst-features-of Gen. jackisoa'siadmitlis <nation. ,it was the one whieh, More than all others, alarmed honest; area for the safety and integrity of our blesstid institu tions. 4t was a direct appeal it) the- cupi dity and evil passions of dernago ues. All , the predecessors of Gen4ac n . would have turned with-loathing and abharrence 'from a principle so utterly at was *lib the spirit of our institutions: it rerbained fur the tyrannical crew who wetted theimselves rf* around and inflamed the-prejudices Gen.% Jackson, to engraft this malign +a e upon our republican system. 'We trust iaGod 'it will be forever repudiated with 'Pt Goths who now hold possession ofithe-fouutry. • Punic -Defaulters:— In speaking of de rankers to the government . under the ad ministration of John Q. Adams" , and those under the late and present Admieistrations, the -Louisville Journal makes the following forcible and striking remarki, which should cause the present reigning Ell nasty to blush: "Every body remembers what an outcry was made a few years ago *boil' the defal cation of Tobias Watkins. T,bose were times of official integrity, and join& de 41la (ideation attracted the attentio nd awa kened the indignation ofthe hole coun try. How altered ate the condition of things at the present time ! Y Now the names ofll4 defaulters among the Admin istration Receivers and Custism House Collectors, to say nothing of .more than 2000. Poptmasters, aro-laid befim the ro- We; 'yet the alarming -ezpositiOns scarcely 1 arousepublic attention even/0 a moment! In the days of government . - pu ity, the de- - ' tection of a single defaulter created far more astonishment than the eiposition of , thousands now—the loss of 1900 dollars by official peculation was infipitely more talked about and written shoot,. end bar rangued about then, than the open seizure of one third of the national revenue now by the office- holding' banditti E of the goir . moment." l '7b the Parpoie.—There is a ear deal of pith and point in the follorrinf resolutiort i pa at the ssed L recent Young Men's Whig Meeting n New York: Resolved. That we can place noiconfide ce in an administration, which -assails credit while it is itself sustained by credit; which redeems the promise of a metallic currency,the issue of Mills.ion of inconvertible paper w eh retrenches outlay by augmenting the salaries of office , hcad. ; vas era. and reforms patronage by i ing their number', which Ones us a chez. r and more Democratic system. by trebling sr alums/ ex. peaditoree; which found os witl an- immense Maimed Surplus in the Tensor,. sad has in. volved us in a NATIONAL D : . The House that Jack B 0-4 k buil. ding of great size (containin: 156 rooms) has been erecting for the use of the Trea sury Department; when lel r o sooner are the walls 11 up, than it is discovered that they must be taken down again. A com mittee if Congress, assisted[by two able architects, have reported in skibstanee, 1. That the 'building pl ced where it ought not to be. 2. That it is not suited WI the• purpose for which it is intended. i 3. That It is exceedinglygip. 4. That if completed on t present plan 4 1 it will inevitably tumble do . • They, therefore, recrimmlind that it be taken to pieces, and built •at another place -on a better plait. The wornsitip, are. already expended, will be a loss of about IPIO,OOO, and it will cost • t rty thousand MOTO to unbuild it—total los , 3110,000. No one can fain° be stru k by the me. -1 tiphiiiical resemblance : bet w n the edifice la and tie administmtion itself 1.. The administration Dlhere it ought i not to be. • ' 2. It jaunt fur its design, 3. It is. exceedingly ugly. - 4. 11 it doom notsoon taalltisdnwn of it self, it must-bkpulled down. I - Colusibiareirscep.., : .... The Rev. C. W. Howard, of pt illedntla, Geer gia, was commissioned M "this 8 is to promed to Borland for the purpose of coquille, its co. loaialltemeds. The thrlethorpeil d astitation Georgic. hu also engaged the on geedeman to proems a complete Philisophi Apparatus, Mr. Howard sailed limn thrw'r kto England by eiliattbs rseros Baskets. . rota . , log .' L._ _____ - The tia Or eithiltideipbia:tai ofTeretl a reward -$2,9, for the apprebetudon and conviction of tile "idle-perpetrators." A Malin* , wndlet hatrbeen produ ced by the !heavy ins which -have fallen within a de* • • pelt. We bias' not yet karne the I amount of damson done ther eby. couple of good boats went over a dam below us and vreria bro ken to pie*. They were the property of Messrs. 'Cole, Donaldson !It Co. of Dan ville.- We edge had some washings in our borough sand Neighborhood, but none 1 1 of great-moment: II - It is stated - that the - Girard Bank has Awed to* take - 11100,000 of the temporary State loan,.at 4 Or cent. the Philadelphia Loan Company will -take $100,000; and the'Cominercial Bank $50,000., Anrehesteehr ligtkeiltreerirer., JOHN Dli.7ECET i and THADDEUS STE. VENS, Eriers.„ tans Commissioeers, io place of Moses Dalliva9, and r. Taggart, reigned. The Board now consists 4f Messrs. Stevens, 'Dickey, and E. Y. Pennypacker; whw assembled at Har. riabum, on the 17th inst., and organised by the eleition of Mr. Stevens as-Preikident of4tho board. f SoUth'Carolina has is tion convening the Ge -that State, on the 28th onsideration such met bmitted in consequence oration in the city of The governor sued his pr . • neml Assembly o inst. to utkeinto• sures as may be of the late •conik Charleston. Anitiker turnt4t.—A letter from Pat terson, N. J. dated 11 o'clock on Monday night, details an incipient slavery'row in 'that town , whit was happily put down instantly by iithe oung Men's Society," , i which happened to have a meeting. 40- - formation being • ommunicuted to them. that a 'troop of inordeily beys And men were assailing the tatilding in which the Antislavery Society were holding their meeting; these yelling men mitantly repair. ed to the spot, and without magistrates or officers, by their firm and resolute `remiin strancea, induced , the rioters disperse. 14Quirfr• A Vote.—k young friend of ours, says the Washington (Pa.) Reporter, who . was recently at Philadelphia, to lay in a hock of goods, informs us, that when on his way homeward, he had the honor of riding a short distance on the canal, vith fife elc cellency, avid Rittenhouse Porter. 'On Mr. Potter's leaving the boat at Hunting don, and while yet within the limits of 'Huntingdon county, a vote was taken, on the gubernatorial quistion. The result was, that out of 60 passengers car board, there voted For Ritner, For Porter, ' e learn that a man Who be of a highly, respecta rrested on Tuesday, and derman Sinn, "Charged concerned in the recent ennsylvania Hall. Mr. as the principal witness, he was in the Hall on the ilagmtion, and saw• the ngaged in tearing down inciting others to the de. building. He has tnoWn eight or ten years, and is be individual, who was e sem of 13,900 for his - the alderman, ton Fri , k.—Penn.;litq.. An Arrest.— is represented tol ble Family, was , token before with having'bee destruction of ' Shotwell, appea - and testified tha night of the co prisoner' busily the blinds and stroction of the the prisoner for positive as to bound over in t appearancS befo day, at 12 .—An aged colored Irtr urday night last instaota• earing the shouts of the borhood of where she re in Shippen divot. She •• mbly during the riots in years ago, and supposing be massacred, the Orem .n het mind, that she et• bout a groan.—Pocws. Elects of F man died on Sa neoualy, upon mob in the neig, sided, somewb suffered corksid: Southwark - a to Oat she would was To great ti .1 pired -.—Gov. fill has nomi • bury, the present &ere ! sury of the United States, j Chief Justice of the Su- New liamphsire, and the of course be ratified by ; d Cotincil. The Concord f the Boston Courier 'ac. nuoancement by the state a understood that the tary will immediately re. :taryship, and that Amos ! his successor. - Isaac Hill de Postmaster General of .—Ptnn. Mr. Woodb nated Mr. W tarp of the'T to the office o preme Court o;i appointment -w the Governor correspondent companies this merit, that it Treasury Sec sign . his Sec - Kendall will ..- will then be n the United Stagy The Louisville Journal t. says: " We bevel seen a le gentleman, direCt from I 'pita! of Misaissipo, who t wilco he left that place, ~•n received from the whole , urea from all the counties being official. Prentiss laiborne was about 9000, le more than 200. " Pren. Minus:pr., of the 18th ' highly rupee Jackson, the informs us k th returns had State—the re except,. Pinola majority over and Word's. viva 1104 Wo - Washington, tasted faulted WON about 'starting for r od Claiborne ineLalreeill Riveiand umieMlMUie=aiM sem EWES I* - I} -- )II — EN'IiCON4 BritiON. iiiktroldws Ail Week, w it)) -*statement Orthe number or Delegates ap peku:sidus njneuksVeienties--nany coum tiel(PgM l o l .d 4 1 .1 11 have been appoint. -et, we Urn not hard, from. ThiConven- -don to behest Pittsburgh, in Septem ber, will be well attended by the Young bieWtrtberweitits partibrthe state. „Wd.b JoureaL PhiladelPtia, • r 200- Montgownerrennidy, I 126 Sthuilkill, • • " -240 Berke, 35 2 Cumberland, York, - 73 : Lancaster, • • 300 Dauphin, 'l7O Bucks, . 300 Mien, 35 Lebanon, ' , • • 300 Northampton, • , 72 Lehigh„' '147 . . Chester, - 200 'Washington, 28 Northimperlanil, 80 Delaware, ' • AOB Somerset, • 100 Columbia, 32 OM CM traitMt at loration eviction 0!!-PcrIP in burn- , •29. • . •:, . , - 1: 4,t4- . theVrie Gazette expresses An ~41 4 ,,, ' 7 that the Ritner majority in' :Abet :' l':'' ' cannot fall short of 1800 Totes, ~..,, ~' ELECTION "OF A . U. S..SENATOR. Oa the 15th inst. the Legislature of Connecticut elected DENNIS KLXBERLY United-States Senitor, iu the place of John M. Niles.. The vote amid thus: Kimberley, Niles, .119 Whig n►djority, We 'find the following in the Baltimore Chronicle of yesteiday. We 'had ram in this city about 9 o'clock, but no great ad. dition to-the wind . therhad prevuiledduring the day. Our city wanyesterday afternoon visited . by a storm of wind and rain, *hie% although of but short duration, was of etztmordinary 'violence, and occasioned very considerable damage. • •it commenced about 7 o'clock, passing over the city fines the:South-Wed to the North -East; carrying off in its progress ; . Ihesroofit and chimneys of houses, and scat tering their fragments over the streets.— We have not heard • that any lives were lost or that any person was severely in. jured. It is impossible to detail the many cases in which lass was 'suffered 'by the owners. of property, lee tuite the % fol. lowing which 'lima Sinder•dur Own °beer., 'stion. The, tide Woof capon the 'new Christ Church, next door to the Chronicle office, was, to a great extent, torn off, and rolled up, as if by the operition of some power ful Wiachine4. An immense nisei oftotipdr rooting wai!: Tipped from , thelop'of the Mineola,_ corner of Calvert and Market streets, and carried into the street. A large bench which Was upon the roof,iiras carried'by The wind to the corner of Fayette and Calvert Streets. The granite warehouses in Market street, between 'Calvert rind South, occupied by T. Palmer & Co., and others unroofed.—' The warehouse Of Joseph Talk* and Son, Eutaw street, unroofed. The vhimey of Jenkin's saddlery store, in Market street, :blown down atia roof dashed in. The chin:Mel Of a hobs° in Saratoga Istettet, -blown down. Tive front of Thomas C. Dilatory's 'Stable on Frederick street blown down. The gable 'end ef a hotse in Harrison street, blown down—fell on a caperiters shop, and crushed it to the ground. Part of the wall of the old circler on the Fella and the whole of the old wall on Low street blown deem. TAMo chimneys ell Thos. Kelso's dwel ling on York at. blown doevi. Betides these', we learn that Chimneys were blown offend houses partly "rumored in every street within the hurricane. The roofs of zinc, copper, avid to, appear to have been partierdarly iftpased to danger. Most of the balms - covered in title way that were in the Way of the storm, were in jured, in a greater or less degree. The shipping in port, we are grad to learn, escaped without injury. So sudden was the approach of the storm, that it was impossible in take any precautions to guard against it, and we hare heard of eaveral instances in which the lives.. of persona seem to have been almost mirccoloosly preserved. One case, which r ctirred in our neigliborgood-, is 'worth relating. - At the moment when Abe storm was at its height, Mt. Haalani, a ion of tbe celebra ted veterinary- itorgeenc.lrarr -abaft Irritat ing. on horseback, tbe - itiible of Mr.. Den levy. He had eot• paired the door an in slant before the gable' end wall fell with a heavy crash. Had he been a secoid or two litter he oast have perished. Megan . kens leiftereA— The Philidelphia V. EL qatetie *dee ihiLe iles*lty tit couoo.goode. 'emptied lift 1 0 ,!iwIrer,h, ametiquenily without duties, and meet loilliledelphii for eals, wire a .kir• lieyeeteee embed 14 NOW et she Philedelphia cesteetboeile - A Baltimore pipet' states that iChtediterskel ethe, has been broeibt that , Ott e r the RockY ad! melith Vektieftsial • hith• irdelOot Iteitillitititietkeighty peep& MESE! TORNAtitk THE TREASURY NO= B TheNatimmlletelligeat4or4Ftidej The T reett ili.i it ed, bowevei ' *thee* Swig' Maim isatores) has weed the seat tins goeirto the Bete mese me that , body . ; with the . far the Moroi' amps le hoe. owe. le all the annals oflegklation• dorfarallet can be found. In all its lei to theltlatory of tine bill.. It reeding 'hy.* caking voice body of tbeT,base being eqUalll against mand"on'the moticia iota. the quindmiiidiren deo by 110 total to 109. lirld not the added to the leaser numbrOied thus negatived . tbe proposition. 'lto ally palmed, or tuber eeeiped, - 14' stituoity! FROM WASHING N [Correipatidenas of the . :ImM and Waxman= Mar The Traitor, Note Bill waa. Clay of (Ny.),amatiented aloe ordinary haste-With *filch this ► back from tin Fiat:HM.olmm' the samelay on 'high it hid the House and referral. He whether the comaduee had in .. considered Ada important measure. what authority they had; to Alo no. dw tinge of the Senate without express Mr. Wright said the measure wr to be dispatched—the emergency that be had'ahtiught peeper to sub 1 the member:of the , committel.ser laces. and u majority had ant port thetreasure. Mr. Wilistei then todli thdßoor at great force against the Mode of ritisi These notei he contended. would low par. and he objected en kel; trance given beck to the p iper He declared the • Adm nistr ;pretext of a saddest emergency your of this measure. 1 nsoni 'aloe had elapsed,. abundant ,time gaged to provide a general and pert vial system. But hil'great objection was that creates Inequality . every day. If Goverr pays depreciated paper. It molt be like. the tax paver. and the isonsidusera are the i yesi.— coriclUded 'by . expressing hie Illegneis to 'owser, thing to supply the Tressur by regular provioions. He would now vote for t a millions, or three millions. and if there are timid bills, enough to pay those Ltelli, and d see how much more Ms wonted to enable. the rernment to go on, end be cdfered a priiiision his effect, that the Unoinit sieisiitta`isimed orb id not ax teed two iiiilgostiof dollars. The debale was centlootilhy Me Wright,. CalhOiso, Preiton ind Criktenden. Mt. Clay oflEf.ishowed the real uses of the erribirreasinents of the cerement were its . riCkliss extravagance a profligate waste of public money. The Admi istration his expended one hundred and &re .mi ioas of dol. tars in three veils. During four ears of Mr. Adam's 'AdministratiOn. the public expenditure; amounted to forty eight millions! He contend.i ed that the Object of the bill wu istablish a Government Bask..Hulk* been defeated hi their Sub-Treasury project, they. • new fbr creating - a.paper`eiteulatilm. Mr. Webster's proposition. was Hfin put 'to vote and tejected--ayes 16; nays p Mr. Preston did not, therefore, spit hi s ias pre posed luoinsdinent, and the bill was rielly by i vote of 27 aywq 13_ nays. Senate hu mediatelyStajouroed. 44 [CtiireiMaidence of the Courier & Wasinicirok, M Mr. Chiy MI -ftesentilig lille . 111 use. mg for a :Sank of the United Ilte took occa sion Lb auks some remarks as tot pwn views. 4 .41 fle egidNbere had been much mho pkotentcltion aUe on the 'liked. It had 'been ._ anti his sole object wu to extend 4 the Pres ent Bank in Philadelphia. After ' in/ hire. self in terms highly. complimen y to to Mr. Biddle and Mr. Gallatin, he added diet he-was not in firr arida or lint luau ' • .' • of thisor du individual; but that hew a ilank, and, perhaps, Under a ,eirconistan' • ~ it would, be most toedient Wham en • • . deirlank. He GM and, while he twasiip,h *Gold throw 'mak few of -those 'maidens d restrictions which 'he should deem proper in di en Insti tution, se-• we; for an ample pital; slain Affy *Wiens of dollars, to be ow ed partly by the United States, partly by the , - lei, and the balance by individualpitizens. • In deference to prejudice, which • tt Wan known existed in some quarters, he wo hate no for eign' stockholders. It woidd time k genuine Americon instrtudem. To sec*e the bib hailers 'kik , • ' eontingsoily:an edentate lumina c should pe bir ow in other stock., lir the redeinption 4 their n • great mass Ofthe community . w .': • ' against loss. ' The ' area of tiro de • 'i Bank. or of borrowing . Money, it, limitary acts. -1{ wee so it hi k! .6, 1 They ought.tberefore, to be tr '' r , He wu Sir th awing o ' bp Bank to the public, se that. e I . i „ modation rented ton tiny TS r might - be' tholin. There • - 'the weedily Which was obse . ' ',. Morigittel, it» reairds were' ' t. This draiving aside' the ree l of , ' I hive a good effect as lathe ' - 0' me bankolightotakS. - It freqo 1 that when failures , took place a - i the banki possessed ill Or nearly sit, ty of the batikruPl, and that while •J ply secured, the - *bile . got notht . e chfelt that eystem of lasiness. He would lifitit the amountlof d 4 parr tool, per .antietn. I flo *mid ploo pot a r restri e lion, , which they shush) be allow to, ry -ehiar er draft, drawn by . it or place Omit any other co y 0 Mired Bate. In this way i but. to the equalisation of d goo ' ITe **dolts} restrict. as fie special provision', any' inter debt of the U. States- with ill bank with thetelectione'lif . The constibithaud q • mils. It ought no &Inger , 1 open• nuestion .:Foot dines the a:iota - iced the wilier to stitutioii.- I! had beim meta a the Fatterlt. - hte tone • Father of theitiiitstitatiolei A .Father of theSallearY. kticseg: iehl: MK Clap ee'are Of thiruksiiatY hf inch in li eiteelVerell ihirameed, that rand tatelarfetek it wottlithe alias& I Unritroje . I. have nct Suet lien trinajorilyetherteople illy bid, tieVeitid On a &rims 1 * tisit*ltilihey inn for it, ittv inillslewi,e WV and new k et t FM niter.) 'dl;fitie. 'Jo my of the capital aed vet apart Thit's the be protected alters la the it, wets vol- Ntoill bolder*. b4olts of the emit of aecom. Er Or ender I nomad* . for In the cue of to every man. ry, .would of loans which ally happened, nts6 found that ail the proper. ItNiy were eon. would ibends , , the elirige kit Ilia! eve fiiim":Sos sky ••se is the excban- • I passible. br ef the Prise'- . oref the oeld net die imoidered an Sad affirmed mob an in.' , IWutungton. adioon, the alohal. the. _ , lil tamvictions styrition, I am 4 r existing ba t ime to make I be . a !kola P!M
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